Jallianwala Bagh - Why Indians fired on Indians
I
lived in Hong Kong for some years. One of the facts I observed was that Hong Kongers
by and large do not like Indians and many of them even hate us. Whether an Indian
goes on to look for a home or on the streets to buy groceries, the feeling is
palpable. Many Indians I talked to said they feel it rather strongly. I had asked
several people but got no satisfactory answer.
Finally,
I asked a local friend about the reason. He was a historian at one of Hong Kong’s
University. At first he tried to deny that this exists but then later said the roots
of it are historical. “Do you know,” he said, “the British came to Hong Kong in
1841 and when they tried to build the first police force with the help of locals,
they realized that the loyalty of the locals cannot be trusted to follow their orders
or shoot and kill if their fellow brethren revolted or were a rebellion. But they
realized they didn’t have the same experience in India. So they brought the
Indians. The first batch of Indians who came brutalized and tortured the people
here. The memory still lives in the mind of every person here and we haven’t forgiven
you for it and will never do,” he said in a deeply emotional voice. “You Indians
followed orders and didn’t show any mercy towards us which we expected you would
do.”
I
could only apologize to him and said it was an injustice. But what he had said left
me perturbed. In social sciences ‘the other’ is a term that denotes how human
beings divide, create walls with other groups whom they perceive as not similar
to them and even inferior. For the American ‘the other’ is everyone who is outside
America. For the British everyone who is not White and outside the country is ‘the
other’. For the man from Pakistan it has become the Indian. Same can be said of
the Chinese. But the curious thing for Indians is that for many an Indians ‘the
other’ is not an outsider but another Indian only with whom his deepest chasm lies.
He is someone whom we make into an enemy.
“You
Indians, you have done it with your own people, like in Jallianwala Bagh. That
is how the British controlled your nation for two centuries, isn’t it?” The
historian’s words have stayed with me since then.
In
one of his books, Amitav Ghosh, the author, writes that the British believed that
the Indians can always be relied upon to ruthlessly put down any one whether their
own in India or anywhere else on their orders, something they could never imagine
doing with anyone else. Would a Japanese be ever trusted to fire on its own
people on the orders of a foreign General? Would a Chinese army have done so
when asked? I believe the answer is a big no.
As
one ex-General from the former British Indian army said, “The British were masters
in making the Indian people believe that they were fighting on the side of the truth
and so when the Indians fought a fellow Indian they saw him as evil and felt little
or no guilt killing him.”
Is
that why even today we are deeply divided, can torture a fellow Indian and feel
little empathy, even shoot at him or beat him to death?
Why
did we Indians create ‘the other’ amongst each other and not outside like other
nations do?
Once,
a British historian, on the mention of Jallianwala Bagh, said that a British police
force or army would never shoot at its own people if asked to do so.
Why
did we Indians did it then? I believe it is worth finding an answer to this
dilemma.
Why
didn’t the police force refuse to follow Michael Dyer’s orders and not shoot at
their own people? This maybe is one of the most poignant and perplexing questions
in understanding why British could rule India.
Has
the notion of ‘the other’ as one we can hate and eliminate always existed amongst
us in our history and as one that the British only perfected when they came in contact
with us? I wish to ask this on the 100th anniversary of the tragedy of
Jallianwala Bagh if we as a society created a gap within that can cause fissures
and we can again be ordered into maniacal behavior on the orders of a white man
or woman.
Did
we carry our philosophy of ‘vasudeva kutumbakam’ too far and become like the subjects
in Milgram’s experiment?
Jallianwala
Bagh to me appears to be not the action of a deranged, crazy lunatic General but
of a psychopath who knew this weakness of Indians only too well, who understood
this mindset in us. He knew that when ordered to fire, the men wouldn’t stop because
the cries of their own country men would have no effect on them. This philosophy,
sick and dangerous, may need to be addressed and understood that may lead us to
kill each other or destroy. Will it ever lead us to become a united cohesive nation
and not hold us back?
Creating
‘the other’ and making him into an enemy is dehumanizing which has just not only
been symbolic, making us slaves but also making us lose what is the most
precious, our freedom. It delineated us from the power that rightfully belonged
to us as a nation.
Last
year we visited the Jallianwala Bagh. There were hundreds of people laughing, talking
and taking pictures. No single face looked solemn. Only some seemed curious looking
at the Well or the Bullet marks on the wall. Where does this detachment from
our history comes from?
Slavery
dehumanized us Indians. As we know from history, no group cedes its privileges
over others out of altruism but is forced to do so when the privileges they enjoy
begin to threaten their survival. Gandhi could never do that to the British.
Only once during the INA Trials and the Naval Revolt, it happened when the idea
of one Indian being separate from ‘the other’ got erased terrifying the British
into thinking it might bring their annihilation in India.
Will
the present generation erase this blot? In it perhaps lies the safety that will
make our future generations safe from the contradictions that pushed our ancestors
into slavery and annihilating each other.
Rajat
Mitra
Psychologist
and Author of ‘The Infidel Next Door’
Wow! This is utterly incredible and shocking. Looks like we haven't changed since the last 100 years. Even today the gang of congress leaders and its fawning supporters, urban naxals; lefties, commies, so called intellectuals etc., are doing much the same though not necessarily thru guns and bullets; but otherwise. What can lead to a change in this temperament of ours, when and how?
ReplyDeleteIn India there is a 4C system from centuries and that is responsible for Indians firing on Indians. That 4c System is 1) Class 2) Caste 3)Color (skin) and 4) Corruption. It is not slavery that conditioned Indians' minds but it was one or more components from this system made Indians fire on Indians. This system is responsible for promoting fake Mahatma and fake Pundit at the top of political system and wrongfully projected them as Hero responsible for Indian freedom in 1947. In fact, objectively thinking, there was real hero who was 1000 times better than these Pundit and Mahatma in every way, intellectually, philosophically, morally, education wise and was true visionary and true patriot who would have made great first PM of India and that hero was Dr. Ambedkar but Indians' mind infested by this system tried to suppress him and never allowed to implement his ideas at that time. It is Indians' luck that he drafted Indian constitute but unfortunately he could not do so many things he wanted to and finally had to resign from Cabinet with disgust for not letting him table bills on women's right. Again root cause for this is same 4C system.
ReplyDeleteThis phenomena was seen whenever some foreigner attacked our country. There were always some of us who sided with them and fought their own people. Even today you will see many fellow countrymen justifying the British rule.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very good and made me ponder.
ReplyDeleteBut the logic give by your Hong Kong friend for hating Indians may be incomplete.
By the same logic they should hate the British even more. But hating is far off, they just love the British. They think that they may be their savior in the future.
By my personal experience in Hong Kong, I think they hate Indians because they will hate anybody who it non-white, including the Mainland Chinese.
Utter nonsense. As of today, the Chinese are being suppressed by their own police. The German Gestapo under Hitler tortured & killed own people.Multiple groups of Muslims are killing eachother in Middle East. Japanese very much inflicted violence on their own through the history.
ReplyDeleteRemember Tiananmen 1989 ?
ReplyDeleteDear rajat mitra your analysis about why singaporians hate Indians is completely rubbish. Nobody respects another person because of his country of origin. Indians with good education and behaviour are respected all over the world. Does every American, British or German whether a professor or criminal is welcome in Singapore.
ReplyDeleteThe troops that fired weren’t Indian. They have a country of their own. It’s called Nepal.
ReplyDeleteTake a look here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jallianwala_Bagh_massacre. It’s the 2/9 Gorkha rifles that fired on the assembly.
It was and is inconceivable for the Punjab or Jat or Sikh or Maratha or Madras or Bihar or even the Baloch regiments to fire on their countrymen. There were hindus, muslims and sikhs in that assembly and none of the other Indian Army regiments would have fired. That was the reason why the Gorkha rifles were used.
The Indian Army has problems, but it is one place where you can take pride in your Indianness and can fully realize what being an Indian man or woman to the fullest extent means.
Indians in Malaysia, West Indies, Africa etc. aren’t cared for much either, it’s not just Hong Kong and the bullshit reasoning that your Hong Kong history professor gave.
Truth is most of the world is racist towards Indians. I don’t know why that’s the case. Africans have some very offensive terms for Indians and so do the Chinese. So, you shouldn’t to believe in all these racist stories that people tell to justify their racism and hatred and pleasuring in suffering of the other.
Indians can be racist yes, and that is a definite wrong, it is not something justifiable. Notice the Hong Kong people in your example they don’t say it is wrong to be racist, they try to justify it. And really fuck em all. You don’t have to believe their racist stories. And question your own people and value.
In all these places where Indians have migrated we have through only the strength of our hard work and smarts build strong communities and great wealth. So fuck all the racist pricks.
And by the way, we have to move beyond assuming the white man or woman is a potential racist. That is not true. It is in the west that Indians are better accepted that’s why you have Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella and any number of Indians in high profile public roles in the west.
All of this being said, yes agree with you in the sense we as Indians do hate ourselves a little more strongly outside of India. And that’s why we tend to believe these racist stories other’s tell about us.
An antidote to hating ourselves is taking a silent, dignified pride in our Indianness and all the good that it actually does stand for. Being secure in our Indianness and not going to extremes of being oppressive or domineering on our fellow Indians or other peoples.
This has been doing the rounds and is BS.
ReplyDeleteFirstly firing on people at Jallianwala Bagh was by a Gurkha battalion. Till late in WW2 only British officers served Gurkha units so the premise on which his argument is based is wrong.
The Chinese may well hate Indians but that may have to do with the fact that Indian troops fought in the First Opium War which led to HK being seceded to the British. They also fought against the Chinese during the Nanjing Incident of 1927.
There were no foreigners at Tiananmen Square. The Japanese Samurai used to kill serfs without a thought, for simply not showing enough respect. Trained soldiers will rarely question orders but adhere strictly to procedure. The German Army in WW2 is a an example. The Romans used troops from conquered territories to subdue other areas, so nothing new about that. Also, the atmosphere is solemn at Jallianwala Bagh, the bullet holes and the well certainly do not make people lighthearted. Also the letter of Tagore's return of his knighthood.
Finally the idea of India is fairly recent before that we were small principalities fighting each other!
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